New Research Reveals Humans Were in the Philippines Hundreds of Thousands of Years Earlier Than Previously Known

Nature.com has released a study revealing very crucial information about the first human inhabitants in the Philippines. At an excavation site in the Kalinga province in Luzon, researchers unearthed a remarkable find: 57 stone tools and over 400 bones of various animals, including Philippine brown deer and the now-extinct stegodon, a relative of the elephant. At the same site, researchers stumbled upon a nearly-complete rhinoceros skeleton. What made this discovery interesting was that the remains showed signs of butchering—the kind only achieved by man-made stone tools.

The study described how the bones of the rhino, another extinct animal in this part of the world, exhibited marks that were “presumably made with the intention to smash the bones and gain access to the marrow.” It’s safe to conclude that the early humans behind the slaughter were just hunting for their next meal. Using electron-spin resonance methods, researchers were able to date the carved bones between 631,000 to 777,000 years old, which indicates the presence of human life in Luzon and the South East Asian region earlier than previously thought.

The identity of these toolmakers and hunters remain unknown but researchers have taken an educated guess and pinpoint their origins to Borneo through Palawan, or China through Taiwan.

Before this, it was believed that the Callao Man was the earliest known human in the Philippines, after a 67,000-year-old fossil of a homo sapien was found in Cagayan's Callao Cave in 2007. Researchers have yet to fill in the historic gap between this new study and the Callao Man but that jump in years from 67,000 to over 700,000 is extraordinary.

Hannah is a communications graduate from Ateneo de Manila University. She’s originally from Pampanga and from a big, close-knit family who likes to find a reason to get together at the dinner table. Experiences inspire her. “Once, at a restaurant, I received an interpretation of my second name ‘Celina,’ and it meant 'someone who tries everything once' and that is me through and through,” she says. As for the job, she wants her “readers to be inspired by the stories of the people we feature and to move them to reach for greater things.”